Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 21, 1933, Page 1, Image 1

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    Medford Mail Tribune
The Weather
Forecast: Fair tonight and Saturday.
No chance In temperature.
Temperature
Hit heat yesterday 91
Lowest this morning 62
Your Vacation
will be more enjoyable If you bate
the Mall Trlbuue futlow jroa. No
additional cost. Pbone 7A end place
jour order before leaving.
Twenty-eighth Year
MEDFOKD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1933.
No. 103.
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
G SOROS M. CORNWALL, editor I
the Timberman, probably as well
informed on conditions In the lumber
Industry u any men on the Pacific
Coast, ni in the Klamath country
yesterday.
The lumber outlook, he says, la dis
tinctly better. It la better because the
farmer's condition la Improving.
The farmer la the lumberman'a big
customer.
NORMAL lumber consumption In
this country ought to be some
where around 30 billion feet prob
ably a little In exwss of that.
Last year It was only 13 billion.
The year before. It Was only IB bil
lion. So, you see, lumber consumption m
the past two years has amounted to
only about one year's normal con
sumption. A lot of this shrinkage has been
due to the fact that the farmer has
been practically out of the market.
rrrux farmer has been out of the
1 market because he hasnt Bad
any money .to buy with. So he has
bad to postpone his lumber require
ments.
With prices of farm products DOM
INO BACK, the farmer ought to be
back in the market before long
fi-fHEflE are 30.000 lumber yards
1 in this country." Mr. Cornwall
says, "and If each of these ysrds buys
only two cars of lumber It will aaa
about a billion feet to orders. An add
ed billion feet means quite a little
stimulation."
HIB. CORNWALL knew Jim Hill
" quite well.
"Hill once said to me," he ssys:
" 'It's the women who live' along Its
lines that make or break a railroad.
What they, use takes a high freight
rate, but what the men use tskes a
low freight rate. Railroads can't make
money on all low grade tonnage. They
have to have a fair share of high
rate stuff to go along with It If they
are to show a profit.
So I started out early to make
It possible for the farmers along our
lines to make enough money to buy
their wives some of the things they
wanted.' "
THESE women I they certainly have
a tremendous Influence on busi
ness, don't they?
ANOTHER friend of George Corn
wall was Captain Robert Dollar,
founder of the great Dollar steam
ship business. Csptaln Dollar was a
great believer In China. He said to
George once:
"I like the Chinaman because he
Is peace loving; because Chinese chil
dren obey their parents; becsuse he
is willing to work: and because he
pays his debts."
CAPTAIN DOLLAR used to say:-"If
V we could add only ten cents to
the buying power of each Chinaman.
It would mean FIFTY MILLION dol
lira a dav In new trade for this
country.
"Why, there wouldn't be ships
enough to csrry the new goods that
would be needed If we could only
add such a trifling amount to the
Chinaman's buying power."
"1H1NA and Russia are alike. In that
mey nsve vast populations
in the past have been ignorant and
backward. Russia Is changing tre
mendously, snd some people profess
to fear this change. They think Rus
sia will become a dangerous compet
itor. Let's not worry too much about
that. The change tnat la taking place
in Russia Is raising Russia's BUY
ING POWER, and Captain Dollar has
told us what an Increase In buying
power of backward peoples mesns.
It mesns MORE business for ui
not less.
ALABAMA and Arkansas, both
Southern states, both with the
fear of the drunken negro, go for re
tsl of the 18th amendment by ma
jorities about the asme aa In other
atates that hare voted so far.
That pretty well tells the tsle. Re
peal of the prohibition amendment
may now be t.krn as a foreeone con-!
elusion.
Grain Mart Closed
PORTLANT. Ore., July 31. (API
The Portland grain market, was closed
todsv on account of the legsl holi
day c'etlon day. Th market will
be reopened for business Saturday.
WORK FOR ALL BY
LABOR DAY IS AIM
NATION-WIDE PLAN
Employers Requested Join-in
Mass Attack On Depres
sion Minimum Wages
and Maximum Hours Set
WASHINGTON, July 21. (AP)
Hugh P. Johnson, recovery ad
ministrator, net swiftly in motion
today the nation-wide campaign
to swing every employer Into the
wage raising movement.
He telegraphed to chamber of
commerce president In all cities
nf over 10.000, asking 4 hem to
creiite local committees which
will run the community end of
the re-employment drive.
While Johnson acted. President
RoiKevett kept clone watch on the
movement, alert tnt public reac
tion to the program he approved
only nt night.
By WILLIAM I.. BE ALE
Associated Pre Staff Writer
WASHINGTON. July 31 (fft Every
citizen today was summoned to
covenant with President Roosevelt to
re-employ the Jobless millions by la
bor day.
To more than 5.000,000 employers
was addressed a request from the
President to Join his nations! re
covery administration. In a mass at
tack on the depression bj voluntary
agreements to lift wages and shorten
hours.
Appeal for Co-operation
To the public went an open appeal
for cooperation "by supporting and
patronizing employers and workers
who are members of the N. H. A."
signers of the presidential agreements
for boosting national purchasing pow
er. Powerfully driving this war-like
plan for unifying the country in cre
ating re -employment was a carefully
njapped "campaign of education"
that brusque Hugh a. Johnson sal (3
will "saturate the country with' the
dope on thla thing.
President Roosevelt himself will
take to the people the plan he and
Johnson agreed upon finally late last
night.
Certain of Success s
"I'm Just as certain It will work as
I am sitting here." said Johnson, back
(Continued on Page Three)
CUT BY SIDESTEP
AS LEADERS F
(Coprrleht. IMS, by Paul Mallon)
WASHINGTON. July 21. President
Roosevelt hss a neat way of aldestep-
Dlnis troublea.
He began working It out in tne
first days of his administration. He
has developed It now to the point
of a new decentralized governmental
system.
Sometimes the system falls to wora.
He Is always prepared for that even
tuality. Usually he catches a slight
cold or some other minor lndlsposl
tlsn. It confines him to his room
for a day or two. It gets him away
from callers and agitated advisers,
He hss time to think things out cas'
ually.
Meanwhile he lets the sdvlsers fight
out the burning Issues smong them
selves.
When they have finished he
emcrgca fit and fresh for the final
decision.
That appears to be at least one
angle of what happened the past few
dsys.
The advisers were worrying him
and themselves sbout how fsr to go
In coercing Industry under the new
recovery setup. There were more
plsns than there were advisers.
Everyone was hot under the collar.
Tempera were lost. Rumors were
started thst so-and-ao would resign.
Mr. Roosevelt decided to hsve some
(Continued on Page Eleven)
P
HANGOUT LOCATED
CHICAGO. July 31. (AP) The
kidnapers' rendezvous where John
Factor was held captive for aMKOOO
ransom has been found by depart
ment of Justice scents.
Operatives of the bureau of Intelli
gence said they had found the hide
out In the Skokle Valley marsh near
the right of way of the North Shore
Intenirban line. They began a search
for a grocer they had learned had
delivered provisions to the kldnapera,
suspected to be the Touhy gang.
With Touhy and three members of
Ma RAug In jail, federal snd rtty df
liclala prod o he near a solution
of to Factor abduction.
Stocks Drop in Selling Scram
POST HALTS AT FAIRBANKS
E
IN GLOBE GIRDLE
FAIRBANKS, Alaska, July 31.
(AP) Wiley Post. Oklahoma flier,
circling the world by air, landed here
at 10:42 a. m, today (3:43 p. m.. E-3.
T.) It was raining and there waa
poor visibility.
Guided by Joe crosson, pioneer
Alaska flier. Post left Plat, 875 miles
away at 7:38 a. m. (13:38 p. m.
E.S.T.) The flight took three houra
and 14 minutes..
Post was to refuel here for his
1450-mile flight to Edmonton. Then
he has 3300 more miles to go to com
plete the first solo airplane flight
around the world.
Crosson had brought a new propel
ler to Flat to replace the broken one
when he nosed over In a wind at
p. m. yesterday after being In
the atr 23 hours and 33 minutes on
his flight from Khabaovsk, Siberia.
The aviator still has a chance to
set a new globe -circling record, beat
ting the one set by he and Harold
Gatty in 1931. He left New York
Saturday morning.
He was exhausted and nervous
when he reached Flat yesterday but
waa "feeling fine" when he left there
today.
Crosson led the way to Fairbanks
aa the Oklahoman said he was con
fused over the route after getting out
of his course.
Since he entered Alaska be has
been fighting clouds, mist and rain
the greater part of the time.
Yesterday he said he had been lost
seven hours "following some river.'
1 was raining and visibility was
poor when Post arrived. The weath
er along the- route from Flat had
been none x favorable.
He waa expected to stop at Fair
banks for some time In order to fill
his fuel tanks and to make addition
al repairs to his plane. Because of
the smallness of the Flat field he waa
able to take on only a small amount
of gasoline there.
a-
WALTERS ELECTED
FIRST C01VSIVIANDER
LOCAL D. A. V. POST
At the initial meeting here last
night of the Disabled American Vet
erana of the World Vrar, N. R. Wal-
tera waa elected commander to head
the Medford post. About 35 veter
ans were In attendance, and 39 have
signed the original charter.
Mayor E. M. Wilson gave a welcom
ing address at the gathering, at which
James L. Palmer, state commander
from Portland: Lyle Dai ley, state ad
JutanS, and Walter C. Scott, adju
tant from Portland chapter No. 1,
particluated In the Installation.
Other officers named were: Tom
Lille, senior vice commander; Lloyd
Crosslin, Junior vice commander; Ar
thur Bailee, treasurer and adjutant;
R. Freeman, chaplain; Rankin Estes,
sergeejit at arms, and William Drum
mond and Wm. McMlnn, executive
committee.
Those named on the charter are
Ira D. Can field, Thomas K. Fllnn,
Rankin Estes, N. R. Walters. Arthur
E. Bailee, Walter Jenny, Jos. Shalles,
H. T. Ounter, J. N. Card in, Tom
Lille, L. C. Chandler, Robert C. Van
Valzah, Ernest W. Winkle, M. L.
Wade, W. O. Avertll, C. R. Reynolda,
Hugh Storey, W. N. Foley. Charles
E. Rose, all of Medford; W. O. Drum-
mond. Floyd Croetin, Oeorge Blyberg,
Walter W. Win fee, and Wm. E. Mc
Mlnn of Ashland: Monroe North and
Louis A. Balade, Central Point; E. H
Taylor, Ruch; Frank P. Garner, of
Beagle.
The next meeting has been ached -
uled for Saturday. August 5. ,
central point puns
to divert tourists
A move la on In Central Point to
promote a short cut to Crater lake
through thst town. It waa learned
here todsy through the columns of
the American. Central Points news
paper. Community folders boosting
the Centra) Point short cut to Crater
lake and other resorts are off the
press and will be distributed at an
early date.
Plan are also underway there to
erect a sign, announcing the cut-off
to all tour lit. No comment on the
more wm msds by the Medford
-hambr of commercs when Inter
viewed today.
BASEBALL
American.
Chicago ,
Boston ,
Batteries: Gaston, Wyatt and Berry,
Rhodes and Ferrell.
Detroit : 1 0
Washington - 7 11 0
Batteries: Frasier, Fischer, Hogsett
and Hayworth, Desautels; Whltehtll
and Sewell.
R.
2
..10
H. E.
5 3
13 3
Cleveland ..
New York
Batteries: Hudlln,
Connally and
Pytlak: VanAtta, Moore and Dickey.
(13 innings
St. Louis 8 13 0
Phllsdelphla -.. 3 18 3
Hadley and Shea, Ruel; Msnaltey
and Madjeskl.
National,
R. H. E.
Brooklyn 17 1
Cincinnati ;.. 3 7 0
Batteries: Benge, Shaute and Lo
pes; Derringer and Lombard!.
B.
. 6
.. S
New York .... -
Pittsburg .
Batteries: Schumacher. Bell, Clark
and Mancuso, Richards; 8wetonic,
Hoyt and Grace.
TENNESSEE DRYS
IN WET VICTORY
NASHVILLE, Tenn., July 31. (AP)
Chaining that "the grossest pos
sible fraud" was perpetrated In Mem
phis and Nashville In yesterday's ref
erendum on the 18th amendment,
John F. Baggett. chairman of the
prohibition campaign, said In a state
ment today that the vote la being
very carefully studied with a view
to contesting the election."
Bagqett said: "All hlgh-thlnklng
people, regardless ol whether they
were for or against repeal, know we
deserve and have won," and added:
'We have the city machines of
Naahviile and Memphis to thank for
the very narrow margin which the
wets are claiming."
Pointing to the fact that a num
ber of precincts are, unreported, he
said it was possible the re peal lata
margin will be overcome when com
plete reports are In.
Returns from 3.007 out of 3.333
precincts gave: For repeal, 133650;
against repeal, 114,401. This was a
repeal majority of 9,349.
T
PORTLAND, Ore., July 31 . (AP)
A code which proposes the closing
of Portland grocery stores on Bun
day and holidays and regulates hours
of operation from 7:30 a. m. to 6:30
p. m.. V'aa adopted at a meeting here
last night of the Grocers' and Mer
chants' association. Thla organiza
tion membership does not Include
chain stores or similar non-delivery
units.
The minimum wage for women Waa
set at slS a week or 2.50 a day. The
maximum working week will be 48
hours, and a minimum of 8 hours a
day was established.
For men the week maximum waa
set at 48 hours and the day at 10,
with a minimum of 118 a week or 13
a day.
I
NEW YORK. July 31 P To the
cheers of an enthusiastic throng des
cribed bf police as the greatest since
the welcome to Colonel Charles A.
Lindbergh six years s;jo, New York
C:ty today gave it official reception
to General Italo Balbo snd hts 96
gallant Italian fliers.
Police estimated that at least 60,
000 Jammed Broadway snd City Hall
park crying "Viva Balbol" and "Viva
Italia."
Ticker tape, confetti and torn leav
es from the telephone books fell like
rain and at tlmea It seemed the vis
ion of the drlreTs of the dorens tt
automobile in which the fliers rode
might be impeded.
AIMEE'S HUSBAND
itfrgfetajM i. -.. -: - -"mvffrs... ..
David L. Hutton, Jr., rotund, baritone huaband of the Angelus Tem
ple evangelist, Almee Semple McPherson-Hutton, la shown signing
papers for the filing of a suit of dl 'orce In Los Angeles charging men
tsl cruelty. He plans a career on '.he stags. The evangelist snd singer
were married In 1931. Left to right: Fairfax Cosby, Hutton's personal
counsel; Hutton and Attorney Jerome J. Mayo. (Associated Press
Photo)
LONG BEACH, Cal., July 31. (AP)
Too many celebrities In Jila vicin
ity proved embarrassing yesterday for
Bailey, concierge at the Breakers ho
tel. When David Hutton, Angelus tem
ple baritone, drove up to the hotel
and Inquired if his manager had reg
istered for him. Bailey didn't recog
nise t'.ie husband of Almee Semple
McPherson.., Bailey made Inquiry at
30 OAYS
FORjpiON
EUGENE. July 31. (AP) An order
from Judge O. P. Sklpworth waa filed
tn clteuit court here today granting
Llewellyn A. Banks, convicted slayer
of George J. Prescott, Medford con
stable, 30 days additional time to ten
der and file a bill of exceptions.
Judge Sklpworth J - In Klamath
rails conducting the Jackson county
ballot theft cases, but sent the order
to Eugene.
Banks la still held In the Lane
county Jail awaiting sentence follow
ing his conviction of second degree
murder here In mid-May.
Time for filing a bill of exceptions
would have expired tomorrow, 60 daya
after conviction. . Formal passing of
the mandatory life sentence upon the
former local agitator would then of
coma. The additional time grants an
other stay from sentence, after which
would come admission to the state
prison. .
Banks was found guilty of second
degree murder on May 33 and has
been held In the Lane county since,
with he exception of several weeks
In a Eugene hospital, from a minor
operation. Banks waa charged with
the wanton slaying of Constable
George J. Prescott, on March 16. when
the officer was endeavoring to serve
a warrant In connection with ballot
theft, at Banks' home.
Mrs. Bunks Is In Eugene, and la
reported as a dally visitor to her In
carcerated husband. Banks Is re
ported aa In excellent health, and
gaining weight on Jail fare and con
finement. By employing every recourse of the
law, and legal technicality. Banks has
succeeded In staving off entrance to
the penitentiary.
A motion for a new trial la also
pending. Allegations In this plea were
that Assistant Attorney Oeneral
Moody, In his closing address called
him "a coward hiding behind a wo
man's skirta"; that a woman bailiff
was unfavorable to him, and that the
presa was prejudiced against him, and
his crime.
BERLIN, July 31. fAPt The Ber
lin bureau of the Jewisha Telegraphic
agency hss bn cIomv, by order of
government authorities.
, A Jewish telegraph agency dispatch
from Berlin said that the secret po
lice conflscsted all furniture and
equipment in the bureau. The dis
patch sdied thst the foreijrn service
suspension of ths Oerman service.
ble-
FOR FUEL LOAD
SEEKS DIVORCE
the office and advised Hutton that
his manager had not arrived at the
hotel.
"That's strange," aald the singer.
Then he demanded:
"Do you know who I am?"
Bailey replied with his most ex
pansive golden smile:
"Sure I does, sir. You'a Tom Mix."
Mix has been making personal ap
pearancea at . a local theater this
.week. r .
REGISTER WISH
ON DRY REPEAL
PORTLAND, Ore.. July 31. (P)
The Oregon electorate which in 1915
decided thla state should have no
more of the liquor traffic, stepped
forward today to affirm or renounce
its faith In prohibition.
Wet leaders expected a' two to one
vote for repeal. Dry organizations said
they believed they had "a fighting
chance." -
The polls opened at 8 a m. for a
popular vote on the 18th amendment
and the remaining "constitutional'
prohibition statutes of the state. Last
November by a vote of 306.619 to
138.7T5 the enforcing acts of state
prohibition were repealed. This, :n
fact, nullified the "constitutional"
prohibitions which remained.
The election of 116 delegates to a
constitutional convention on repeal
of the 18th amendment was only an
incident of the balloting. The state
required of each candidate a pledge
that he would vote at the conven
tion, wet or dry, aa his county voted.
The delegates will have no discretion
at the convention, which probably
will be held within 30 daya.
Light balloting was predicted by
state election officials. Out of a total
registration of 444.009, possibly not
more than 380,000 would visit the
polls, they said. The vacation season.
the fact that It waa a apeclal election,
and an apparent general apathy waa
responsible. Although both sides made
use of considerable advertising and
oratory the votera did not become
greatly exercised.
FAMILY WITH AN AX
EUGENE. Ore., July 31. (UP)
Overpowered while threatening two
women and three men with an ax, W
R. Rear Irk was arrested here late to
day and lodged In county Jail.
State police, answering a murder rs
port, apprehended the man as ha
wielded an ax over Mrs. Edward Bush
netl, her son-in-law, daughter and
hired man.
Her husband was slightly Injured
when he csme upon Rearlck in hie
home and scuffled wltb htmi The in
truder waa suspected of burglary.
Cobbler Kills
Police Officer
PI.EMINOTON. M. J., July 31. AP)
Andre Kuboachln, 46-yar-old Lam.
brtvllle ho.m.ltr. who had been
charged with attack Inn a nine-year
old Rlrl, faced an even more aerloui
rherne lodev a. the remilt of hie eley
mg the police recorder before whom
hs as arraigned.
Rally at Finish
DREGONIANS CAST
SLENDER VOTE IN
Llttlo Interest waa manifested to
day In the apeclal election In thla
city, with alow voting during t.he
morning hours. At noon 36 ballots
had been cast at the North Central
precinct In the city hall, 44 at the
North Main precinct In the Hotel
Holland, and A3 at the Newtown pre
cinct In the court house auditorium.
Other Medford precinct.-; were voting
In the same ratio.
A slightly higher percentage waa
being maintained In the rural dis
trict precincts.
It Is expected that the afternoon
and uvenlng houra will bring out a
larger vote.
PORTLAND, Ore.. July 31. (AP)
In Increasing numbers as the after
noon progressed, votera of Oregon
expressed their convictions by ballot
at talay's special prohibition elec
tion. The morning hours saw little
more than 6 per cent of the total
registration accounted for at the
polls.
The voting places opened at 8 a.
m. and were to remain open until
8 p. m. (P. 8. T.) In only a few
precinct were counting boards to
begin operation before the closing
hour.
Repeal of the 18th amendment and
of the remaining state prohibition
laws received little more attention
t.han did the proposal to levy a 3
per cent sales tax,
Prom Marshfleld, on the coast.
came, the report that of the first 50
voters at two precincts, 34 said they
had voted for prohibition repeal, and
16 aatd they voted the dry ticket.
out of a total registration of 444,-
009, stats officials estimated possi
bly not more than 370,000 would
visit the polling places. Before
lunch time In Portland, where 495
of the state's 1,787 precincts are lo
cated, an average of slightly less than
16 per centof the registration ,had
16 per cent of the registration had
In the last prohibition vote In
Oregon, held In November, 1333, 345,
304 ?otera marked ballots. Of these
300,019 voted to repeal the enforc
ing statutes of the stats prohlbtlon
code, and 138,778 voted against It.
Prohibition advocates seemed to be
agreed In discussing the current elec
tion that they had no mors than a
fighting chance." The wets claimed
the state by a two-to-one margin.
T
BURLINOTON. la., July 31, (AP)
Elliott Roosevelt, son of the presi
dent, and Miss Ruth Cooglns of Fort
Worth, Texas, will be married hers
tomorrow under present arrange
menta the Associated Press learned
from sn unimpeachable source to
day.
Young Roosevelt will arrive here
by plane today, accompanied by his
sister, Mrs. Anna Roosevelt Dall. Mrs.
Dall will be Miss Cooglns' only at
tendant.
Only immediate members of the two
families will be present at the wed
lng In the home of Oeorge C. Bwller,
brother of Mrs. J. B. Cooglns, mother
of the bride to be. -
F. R. HOPES CONFAB
L RECONVENE
WA8HINOTON, July 31. (AP)
President Roosevelt expects the Lon
don conference to reconvene In the
fall and waa said today to be hope
ful of some accomplishment,
Tho president 'wmr said to be 'par
tlculaily anxious that before the par
ley ends next week 1f rhak some
kind of progress toward world wheat
control and the Improvemetn of sil
ver. If only a little can be dons for
these things now he thinks that
much should be dons and mors at
tempted later.
No Ransom Paid
Says O'Connell
ALBANY. N. Y., July 31 (AP)
Breaking his silence for the first
ime, Ed O'Connell, uncle of John J.
O'Connell, Jr., today satd a ransom
had not been paid for the kidnaped
boy. The elder O'Connell, Demo
cratic power tipstats, alncs the youth
waa kidnaped two weeks ago has re-
fused to dlscun the rase with either
authorities or the press.
SET FOR SALES IN
PAST THREE YEARS
Enormous Offerings Break
Market Wide Open
Ticker Far Behind Trans
actions Rally Cuts Loss
WASHINGTON, July XI. (AP)
President Roosevelt contem
plates no action regarding tne
stork exchange where price have
dropped considerably tn the last
few days.
It was made clear that the ad
inlnUtratlon Is focusing Its full,
attention on the recovery drlta
and In official quarters the opin
ion was expressed that If specu
lators and Investors are silly
enough to bid up stocks far above
their value they are very apt to
lose their money.
NEW YORK. July 31. (AP) After
their worst break lnc the wild daya
of 1029. stocka rallied today, sub
stantially reducing extreme losses of
S to more than 917 for scores of
leadln; Issues. Salea spproxlmtaed
9.790,000 shares, the largest volume
sines October, 1939. .
. The ticker tape, overwhelmed by
the task of recording transaction in
a market which at mid-afternoon
was demoralised, closed at 3:43
o'clock, a new record for latenesa
for Via present high-speed quotation
dlstrloutlng system.
Tha market was at Us worst
around 3:30 o'clock, when enormous
offerings found virtually no buyers,
out tnen hardened and ftntehed well
above the lows. .
United Btates Steel common closed
at S93.S0, off 5, against. Itk low
of around 149.80.
Union Pacific's close was tlll.TS,
down 8 38, compared with an ex
treme low of S3; American Tele
phone, after dropping to U, fin
ished at 1130, off ,3.75.
Cotton recovered from its lows.
(Continued on Page Four)
PORTLAND, Ore., July 31 (AP)
An Oregon grandstand today echoed
to the roar "they're off 1" aa legalised
horse racing came to this stats for
the first time since 1008.
The 38-day meeting, under the pro
motion of William P. Kyne opened
at the Green am track near Portland
with eight races on the program and
the highest class of thoroughbreds
ever stabled In thla section listed for
action over the new five-eights mils
oval.
ILL
OGERS
Says'-
BEVERLY HILLS, Cal., July
20, I guess Dempsey's got a
cheerful little earful,
I guess Balbo (the only
young man that ever looked
well in whiskers) is flying
somewhere.
I gueBg the photographers to
the London conference are
breaking up all the plates they
exposed there.
I guess Alabama and Arkan
sas voted to show their natives
that there was bourbon as well
as corn; that all whiskey was
not. white.
I guess our great little Okla
homa flier is ahead of his rec
ord. I guess California (as usual,
to be Wie biggest) passed the
highest sales tax rate of ths
whole 48.
I say I guess all these things,
for they are not in any of tha
papers. Nothing can get in a
paper when Sister Aimee is in,
so we are all practically isolat
ed from (he world for the next
couple of weeks,
Cu-
9ltll kttHtwMlrqlute, ba
SMV
XsSk